12,237 research outputs found

    Eddy intrustion of hot plasma into the polar cap and formation of polar-cap arcs

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    Under the simple postulate that multiple large scale detachable magnetospheric convection eddies can exist in the vicinity of the convection reversal boundary and in the polar cap, by Kelvin-Helmholtz instability or otherwise, it is shown that a number of seemingly disconnected plasma and electric field observations in the polar cap can be organized into a theory of magnetosheath and plasmasheet plasma intrusion into the polar cap. Current theory of inverted V structures then predicts existence of similar, but weaker, structures at the eddy convection reversal boundaries in the polar cap. A possible consequence is that the polar cap auroras are natural offshoots from discrete oval arcs and evidently are formed by similar processes. The two arc systems can occassionally produce an optical image in the form of the theta aurora

    Experimental and theoretical investigation for the suppression of the plasma arc drop in the thermionic converter

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    Ion generation and recombination mechanisms in the cesium plasma as they pertain to the advanced mode thermionic energy converter were studied. The decay of highly ionized cesium plasma was studied in the near afterglow to examine the recombination processes. Very low recombination in such a plasma may prove to be of considerable importance in practical converters. The approaches of external cesium generation were vibrationally excited nitrogen as an energy source of ionization of cesium ion, and microwave power as a means of resonant sustenance of the cesium plasma. Experimental data obtained so far show that all three techniques - i.e., the non-LTE high-voltage pulsing, the energy transfer from vibrationally excited diatomic gases, and the external pumping with a microwave resonant cavity - can produce plasmas with their densities significantly higher than the Richardson density. The implication of these findings as related to Lam's theory is discussed

    A note on Zolotarev optimal rational approximation for the overlap Dirac operator

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    We discuss the salient features of Zolotarev optimal rational approximation for the inverse square root function, in particular, for its applications in lattice QCD with overlap Dirac quark. The theoretical error bound for the matrix-vector multiplication Hw(Hw2)−1/2Y H_w (H_w^2)^{-1/2}Y is derived. We check that the error bound is always satisfied amply, for any QCD gauge configurations we have tested. An empirical formula for the error bound is determined, together with its numerical values (by evaluating elliptic functions) listed in Table 2 as well as plotted in Figure 3. Our results suggest that with Zolotarev approximation to (Hw2)−1/2 (H_w^2)^{-1/2} , one can practically preserve the exact chiral symmetry of the overlap Dirac operator to very high precision, for any gauge configurations on a finite lattice.Comment: 23 pages, 5 eps figures, v2:minor clarifications, and references added, to appear in Phys. Rev.

    CUSHIONING PROPERTIES OF SHOE-SURFACE INTERFACES IN DIFFERENT IMPACT ENERGIES

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    The purpose of this study was to evaluate the cushioning properties of the various shoesurface interfaces in different impact energies. Five shoe-surface conditions were tested in twelve different impact energies (3.19~6.67 joule). Results showed that higher impact energy increased the peak inertial force in each condition. Larger peak inertial forces were found in C1 (polyurethane only) and C5 (asphalt+shoe2) conditions. In low impact energy, the peak inertial forces were similar in C2 (polyurethane+shoe1), C3 (polyurethane+shoe2) and C4 (Asphalt+shoe1) conditions. The peak forces in C3 or C4 were larger than C2 in high impact energy. It was concluded that people ought to choose at least a well-cushioned shoe or surface when doing low impact energy activities, such as walking or jogging, and must choose both well-cushioned shoe and surface when doing high impact energy activities

    ANKLE KINEMATICS OF CUTTING MOVEMENT DURING VOLLEY IN TENNIS

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    The purpose of this study was to investigate the ankle kinematics of cutting movement during volley in tennis. Three male tennis players performed three cutting angle movements (0°, 30° & 60°, represents by S0, F30, F60, respectively) to volley a dropping ball with racket. Kinematics of the ankle was recorded by three-dimensional (3D) motion analysis system. During the early stance (the first 30% from heel strike), the results showed difference in the kinematics parameters in the three cutting angle movements for each subject. During late stance (last 30% before foot off), the mean values of everison and plantarflexion angles with F60 are largest in three cutting angle movements, so are the angular velocities. Therefore, the subjects may select different strategies to avoid foot injuries after heel strike. Furthermore, movements of the foot in performing the F60 may increase Achilles tendon injuries and medial tibial stress syndrome before the foot leaves the ground during the tennis volley

    Local Environment of Ferromagnetically Ordered Mn in Epitaxial InMnAs

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    The magnetic properties of the ferromagnetic semiconductor In0.98Mn0.02As were characterized by x-ray absorption spectroscopy and x-ray magnetic circular dichroism. The Mn exhibits an atomic-like L2,3 absorption spectrum that indicates that the 3d states are highly localized. In addition, a large dichroism at the Mn L2,3 edge was observed from 5-300 K at an applied field of 2T. A calculated spectrum assuming atomic Mn2+ yields the best agreement with the experimental InMnAs spectrum. A comparison of the dichroism spectra of MnAs and InMnAs show clear differences suggesting that the ferromagnetism observed in InMnAs is not due to hexagonal MnAs clusters. The temperature dependence of the dichroism indicates the presence of two ferromagnetic species, one with a transition temperature of 30 K and another with a transition temperature in excess of 300 K. The dichroism spectra are consistent with the assignment of the low temperature species to random substitutional Mn and the high temperature species to Mn near-neighbor pairs.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, accepted by Applied Physics Letter

    Seventy-One New L and T Dwarfs from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey

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    We present near-infrared observations of 71 newly discovered L and T dwarfs, selected from imaging data of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) using the i-dropout technique. Sixty-five of these dwarfs have been classified spectroscopically according to the near-infrared L dwarf classification scheme of Geballe et al. and the unified T dwarf classification scheme of Burgasser et al. The spectral types of these dwarfs range from L3 to T7, and include the latest types yet found in the SDSS. Six of the newly identified dwarfs are classified as early- to mid-L dwarfs according to their photometric near-infrared colors, and two others are classified photometrically as M dwarfs. We also present new near-infrared spectra for five previously published SDSS L and T dwarfs, and one L dwarf and one T dwarf discovered by Burgasser et al. from the Two Micron All Sky Survey. The new SDSS sample includes 27 T dwarfs and 30 dwarfs with spectral types spanning the complex L-T transition (L7-T3). We continue to see a large (~0.5 mag) spread in J-H for L3 to T1 types, and a similar spread in H-K for all dwarfs later than L3. This color dispersion is probably due to a range of grain sedimentation properties, metallicity, and gravity. We also find L and T dwarfs with unusual colors and spectral properties that may eventually help to disentangle these effects.Comment: accepted by AJ, 18 pages, 10 figures, 5 tables, emulateapj layou

    Chiral fermions on the lattice and index relations

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    Comparing recent lattice results on chiral fermions and old continuum results for the index puzzling questions arise. To clarify this issue we start with a critical reconsideration of the results on finite lattices. We then work out various aspects of the continuum limit. After determining bounds and norm convergences we obtain the limit of the anomaly term. Collecting our results the index relation of the quantized theory gets established. We then compare in detail with the Atiyah-Singer theorem. Finally we analyze conventional continuum approaches.Comment: 34 pages; a more detaild introduction and a subsection with remarks on literature adde
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